All T-shirts get free shipping option USA only
Shopping cart
You have no items in your shopping cart.
RSS

Beatles News

Paul McCartney seems to be enjoying sharing the backstories of some of his most popular, critically-acclaimed, and beloved songs he’s released. The singer and songwriter is in the middle of publishing episodes of season two from his Paul McCartney: A Life in Lyrics podcast, which sees him looking to the past to mine great tales from the making of his hits.

In the most recent episode, McCartney talked about the Beatles tune “Maxwell’s Silver Hammer.” During the chat with co-host and friend Paul Muldoon, the rocker revealed that he and his former bandmates were at odds over the making of the cut, and that he was to blame for the squabble.

McCartney stated that he was something of a perfectionist when it came to recording “Maxwell’s Silver Hammer,” and that didn’t please the other Beatles. “I remember the guys getting pissed with me,” the Grammy winner revealed. He added that while it “took a little bit long to record,” McCartney himself was “very keen on it.”

All four of the Beatles were known as great musicians in their own right, but McCartney remembers that he “in particular would take too long.” The amount of time and care he poured into each track wasn’t for no reason, though. The legendary musician shared that he had to do so because he was “trying to get what was in my head.”

Source: Hugh McIntyre/forbes.com

Read More<<<

The Beatles wore costumes on the cover of 'Sgt. Pepper.' John Lennon managed to get medals from a former Beatles drummer.

John Lennon brought a connection to former Beatles‘ drummer Pete Best to the cover of Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band. While Paul McCartney and George Harrison adorned their costumes with their MBEs, Lennon did not want to do this. Instead, he reached out to Best’s family several years after unceremoniously firing him from the group. Here’s how he got a hold of his grandfather’s medals.
John Lennon requested to wear Pete Best’s grandfather’s medals on the ‘Sgt. Pepper’ cover

In 1962, The Beatles fired their drummer, Best, and hired Ringo Starr. They were too afraid to tell Best themselves, so they had their manager, Brian Epstein, let him go. Lennon admitted this was cowardly.

“We were cowards when we sacked him,” he said, per The Beatles: The Authorized Biography by Hunter Davies. “We made Brian do it. But if we told Pete to his face, that would have been much nastier than getting Brian to do it. It probably would have ended in a fight if we’d told him.”

Though they ended on bad terms, Lennon decided to reach out to the Best family about wearing the war medals of Pete’s grandfather, Major Thomas Shaw. He received them for his service with the British Raj in India. Lennon reached out to Best’s mother, Mona, about borrowing them for the cover shoot.

Source: Emma McKee/cheatsheet.com

Read More<<<<

A signed copy of a book of Sir Paul McCartney’s paintings has sold for £1,000 after being donated to a charity shop.

The first-edition hardback copy of Paintings, a collection of the Beatles star’s artwork, was given to an Oxfam shop in Wirral, Merseyside, by a regular customer.

The donor, who wishes to remain anonymous, is known by staff in the West Kirby shop as “the Autograph Man” after he made donations including an envelope signed by astronaut Neil Armstrong, which sold for £400, and a Marvel comic signed by Stan Lee, which made £195.

A signed copy of another of Sir Paul’s books – Blackbird Singing: Poems And Lyrics – raised £800.

The edition of Paintings was put on sale on Oxfam’s online store on January 30 and sold overnight.

The inscription inside the book is dated 2000 and reads: “Cheers!”

Source: Eleanor Barlow/standard.co.uk

Read More<<<

Many artists rose to the occasion with tributes to John Lennon in the immediate aftermath of his death. You could make the argument that it took those that were closest to him and shared in the experience of The Beatles to do it best. Paul McCartney’s “Here Today” tried to imagine how Lennon would react to such a tribute. And George Harrison’s “All Those Years Ago” reflected Lennon’s unique standing in the culture as a polarizing figure, while also reconciling Harrison’s own feelings about his departed friend.

What went into Harrison creating the song? How did it evolve based on Lennon’s death? And what made it a kind of Beatles reunion record? Let’s go back to how it got started with, oddly enough, a rejection.

Many of Ringo Starr’s greatest solo successes came courtesy of, you guessed it, a little help from his friends. Specifically, Harrison had a hand in writing two of Starr’s biggest singles: “It Don’t Come Easy” and “Photograph.” Harrison intended the same thing with a song he wrote entitled “All Those Years Ago.” He thought it fit his old bandmate, and Starr recorded the song with the help of Harrison and others in 1980.

Source: Jim Beviglia/americansongwriter.com

Read More<<<

When The Beatles broke up, John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison, and Ringo Starr, were on decidedly bad terms. They were embroiled in a legal battle and spoke publicly about their gripes with one another. One of Lennon’s biggest problems with his bandmates was how unwelcoming they were to Yoko Ono. While it angered him, he still said he could understand their frustration.

John Lennon understood why his Beatles bandmates were unhappy with him

Lennon and Ono were incredibly close, both emotionally and physically. She joined him in the studio, to the irritation of the other Beatles.

“He just wanted to go off in the corner and look into Yoko’s eyes for hours, saying to each other, ‘It’s going to be all right,’” McCartney said in The Beatles Anthology. “It was pretty freaky when we were trying to make a track.”

Source: imdb.com

 

 Do you prefer the Beatles to Wings? Yeah, duh — even Paul McCartney knows that his first big band far outstripped his second, as he has now admitted.

In an episode of the podcast McCartney: A Life in Lyrics on iHeartPodcasts, McCartney discussed "Band on the Run," the title track of Wings' third album. He acknowledged that, even before Wings began, he knew they would never be able to equal the magic of the Beatles.

"A lot of this is just happening in my own mind. It's not what anyone's telling me," he reflected. "I'm automatically thinking, 'Well, the Beatles were great, so Wings is not going to be as great.' My problem all along was: after the Beatles, who's gonna be as good as them? I kind of knew it couldn't happen."

Taking a slightly more optimistic outlook, McCartney continued, "I thought, 'Yeah, but we can be not as the Beatles, but we can be something else."

He acknowledged that it was difficult to know he could never match the heights of the Beatles, but said that he still had "reserves of courage" from the days when the Beatles toughed it out as an unknown band.

Even if Wings never reached the fame or acclaim of the Beatles, they did find success of their own. McCartney noted, "I was talking to a journalist once about Sgt. Pepper, going on about it as if he must admire it, and he said, 'Well, to tell you the truth, it was Band on the Run for me. It's more my generation.' Band on the Run was his Sgt. Pepper."

McCartney added, "That has proved to be a very interesting fact over the years — that there are some people who actually like what I did with Wings better than the Beatles. There are some people whose first thing they ever heard was 'Band on the Run' or 'Jet' or something that we did with Wings."

Hear the episode of A Life in Lyrics below.

Source: exclaim.ca

Read More>>>

The Top 10 Solo Songs Performed by a Beatle 13 February, 2024 - 0 Comments

After The Beatles broke up, each member faced the colossal task of making music under the shadow of the biggest band in history. Paul McCartney took a lot of heat and his early solo albums were not well received by critics. Looking back, the McCartney I and McCartney II home recordings are pretty special.

John Lennon wanted peace and George Harrison wanted a different kind of peace. The quiet kind. Ringo Starr is beloved but he won’t break this Top 10 list.

After The Beatles, the dismantled parts of the greater sum had to learn to create on their own.

“Handle with Care” could have been a solo George Harrison song. Instead, the session featuring Jeff Lynne, Tom Petty, Bob Dylan, and Roy Orbison resulted in a new band, Traveling Wilburys. Otherwise, “Handle with Care” is most definitely on this list. “Got My Mind Set on You” almost made the cut. Alas, it’s a cover.

The Beatles were a supergroup formed in reverse. Here are the top 10 solo songs by a Beatle.


10. “Jenny Wren” by Paul McCartney (2005)

Source: Thom Donovan/americansongwriter.com

Read More<<<

It’s been 60 years since photographer Harry Benson reluctantly agreed to cover the Beatles, first in Paris and then on their historic visit to the United States.

Now 94-year-old Benson reflects on the close relationships he developed with John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison and Ringo Starr.

They allowed Benson to capture some iconic moments from their pillow fight the night “I Want to Hold Your Hand” hit the top of the American charts, to their historic appearance on the Ed Sullivan Show.

Benson decided to stay in the United States where his subjects included former presidents Dwight Eisenhower, John F. Kennedy, Richard Nixon and Bill Clinton, in addition to American icons like Muhammed Ali, Jackie Kennedy and Michael Jackson. As a photojournalist, he chronicled Robert Kennedy’s last moments and walked alongside Martin Luther King, Jr. at the Meredith march.

He joins host Robin Young to talk about his years with the Beatles and how photography shaped his life. An exhibition celebrating the 60th anniversary of his arrival in the U.S. with the Beatles runs through February at New York’s Museum of Art and Design.

Source: wbur.org

Read More>>>

So much is known about The Beatles, as interest in the band has remained incredibly high for decades, ever since they took over the world in the mid-’60s. Countless fans, journalists, documentarians, and historians have attempted to answer every question related to the musicians, but one big query remains: how did they get their name? It seems like a simple ask, but it’s one that no one can answer definitively – not even one of the members of the group.

In the latest episode of his iHeartRadio and Pushkin podcast Paul McCartney: A Life in Lyrics, the Beatles singer, songwriter, and musician opened up about the band’s name and how it came to be–though he couldn’t share any definitive answers. “The actual origin of it is clouded in mystery,” McCartney confirmed, essentially admitting that even he doesn’t remember.

While he can’t confirm or deny any of the possibilities that have been presented throughout the years, McCartney did share what he remembers of that time. “My memory of it was that we went striving to find something with a dual meaning,” the famous musician commented during a discussion of the forming of the group. He also said that he and his fellow bandmates may have been thinking of double entendres and names with more than one meaning “because of The Crickets.”

In the absence of a definitive backstory of the name The Beatles, many fans and music lovers have come up with their own possible ideas of what may have happened, and McCartney mentioned this as well during the podcast episode. “There are all sorts of theories about this,” the rocker mused about the many, many stories he’s probably heard throughout the years.

Source: Hugh McIntyre/forbes.com

Read More>>>

John Lennon wrote a book after he joined The Beatles. He admitted that he could have been an author if he didn't pursue music.

In 1964, John Lennon extricated his public image from The Beatles when he published the book In His Own Write. The book, which was full of Lennon’s nonsensical poems and short stories, received acclaim from critics. It proved that even if he hadn’t been a famous musician, he may have been able to find success as a writer.

Lennon became a published author in 1964. It wasn’t necessarily something he sought out to do; he had simply amassed enough writing to fill a book.

“It’s about nothing. If you like it, you like it; if you don’t, you don’t. That’s all there is to it,” Lennon said of In His Own Write in The Beatles Anthology. “There’s nothing deep in it, it’s just meant to be funny. I put things down on sheets of paper and stuff them in my pocket. When I have enough, I have a book.”

He didn’t think he ever could have become a published author without The Beatles. Still, he knew he would have been a writer regardless of his level of fame. He wondered if he could have been a Beat poet.

“There was never any real thought of writing a book. It was something that snowballed,” he said. “If I hadn’t been a Beatle I wouldn’t have thought of having the stuff published; I would have been crawling around broke and just writing it and throwing it away. I might have been a Beat Poet.”

Source: Emma McKee/cheatsheet.com

Read More<<<

Close